For anyone who has ever prepared for UPSC, one line from Aspirants Season 3 hits deeper than expected: “We are aspirants for life.” Spoken by Abhilash Sharma (played by Naveen Kasturia), it is not just dialogue. It is a quiet truth. One that stays with you long after the episode ends.
With the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) Civil Services Examination, Prelims 2026 approaching, time rarely feels like my own. Like most aspirants, my days are structured, planned, and often consumed by targets.
And yet, when Aspirants Season 3 released, I chose to pause briefly to watch a series that feels deeply personal.
Sometimes, taking a mindful break is not a setback. Not out of distraction, but out of a need we often ignore: to make space for life beyond preparation. It helps you return with better clarity and emotional balance, reminding you that there is a life beyond the exam.
“Pre… Mains… aur Life”
As I began watching Season 3, the series’ tagline, “Pre… Mains… aur Life,” immediately stood out. This season does not just move forward with its characters, it also goes beyond the different stages of the exam and conveys something that is not only seen and heard, but also deeply felt.
As someone living this journey, I may not dissect the series’ craft, but I can offer something equally valuable: an honest account of what it feels like from the inside.
Like the previous two seasons, Aspirants Season 3 portrays the struggles faced by thousands of aspirants who spend several years consumed by repeated attempts to clear the civil services examination. However, what sets this season apart is its shift in focus. It explores a dimension that many aspirants do not think much about while preparing for the exam: life after clearing it. What happens when the dream is achieved? What challenges does power bring? What kind of officer does one become?
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There is also a reminder that topics such as conflict of interest and compassion, which sometimes feel theoretical while preparing for the ethics paper of the UPSC Mains exam, are in fact the very principles that define the kind of officer one becomes when entrusted with power.
The invisible cost of a dream
One of the series’ most honest aspects is how it portrays the emotional cost of preparation: the pressure of expectations, the weight of self-doubt, the uncertainty of outcomes, and the constant question of a “Plan B.”
This makes the Aspirants series evolve, not only in the number of seasons but also in sync with the emotional journey of an aspirant. These are not rare experiences. They are part of the journey for many.
Life beyond the exam
What sets this season apart is its reminder that life does not begin after selection. It exists alongside preparation. Friendships, relationships, and small moments of connection are not distractions. They are what keep us grounded. In many ways, emotional intelligence is not just important for clearing the exam. It is essential for living a meaningful life.
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The series also moves beyond familiar binaries: Hindi vs English medium, success vs failure. It acknowledges a deeper truth that not everyone who starts this journey will end up in the same place. And that is okay.
Given the uncertainty of competitive exams like UPSC, many aspirants today also pursue parallel career paths and skill-building opportunities that provide both stability and growth alongside preparation.
Also Read – Aspirants 3 review: TVF returns with new show, old flow
Always becoming, not just aspiring
By the end, Aspirants Season 3 leaves you with something more than nostalgia. It reframes what it means to be an “aspirant.” Not as a label tied to an exam, but as a mindset of continuously learning, evolving, and striving. Because in life, we do not just prepare for one goal.
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We keep growing, changing, and becoming again and again. And maybe that is what the line – we are aspirants for life – truly means. We are not just aspirants for an exam, but learners for life.
